Borussia Dortmund v Stuttgart: Injury-hit hosts seek swift response

Forward Henrikh Mkhitaryan was the latest to be ruled out this
week with a foot injury picked up in the disappointing 2-0 setback
at Mainz on Saturday.

The 25-year-old was introduced as a substitute for the final 25
minutes at the Coface Arena, but was hurt when involved in a
collision taking a shot late in the match and subsequent scans have
revealed he will be missing for a month.

With Dortmund's squad depleted, long-term back injury victim
Ilkay Gundogan may be involved, but he has not played in a
competitive fixture in over 12 months and it is unlikely that
he could play 90 minutes.

Dortmund's injury woes come at a bad time for coach Jurgen
Klopp, who is hoping to orchestrate a swift response after the
disappointing loss to his former club Mainz.

The defeat was Dortmund's second in the opening four
Bundesliga matches this season and followed an excellent display in
the 2-0 UEFA Champions League victory over Arsenal.

Close-season signing Ciro Immobile missed a penalty against
Mainz when the score was 1-0, but Klopp refused to blame the
Italy international for the loss.

"It all went wrong for us, and that's why we ended up deserved
losers," Klopp noted.

"I didn't assign anyone to take the penalty. Ciro grabbed the
ball and then failed to put it away. It happens."

Dortmund's early season form may be patchy, but Stuttgart will
need no reminder of the danger that Klopp's men possess,
having been on the end of a 6-1 hammering in the corresponding
fixture last term.

Stuttgart finished in a disappointing 15th place in Germany's
top flight in 2013-14.

Huub Stevens did enough in his two-month tenure to keep
Stuttgart in the Bundesliga, but the Dutchman announced his
departure in May and was replaced by Armin Veh, who returned to the
club for a second spell in charge.

However, Stuttgart have taken just a solitary point in a
disappointing start to 2014-15 and are bottom after a 2-0 home
defeat to rivals Hoffenheim on Saturday.

The poor run of form has led to criticism of director of sport
Fredi Bobic, but he has no intention of leaving his role, telling
Bild: "Running away does not help anyone. I have never done
that."